About

Animals are entering our lives.

Lisel Mueller, Alive Together: New and Selected Poems, 1996.

Perhaps never more than now, in a time of ecological and pandemic crisis, do the words of Lisel Mueller ring true. Animals are entering our lives. Or perhaps coming back. Animals, of course, have always been a part of our lives, but in post-industrial countries many humans are a generation or two removed from a life intertwined with non-human animals. Today, the presence of non-humans is perhaps felt more keenly as humanity begins to understand the fullness of our impact upon the environment and other species within it.

Recent art exhibitions such as ZKM’s Critical Zones, FACT Liverpool’s And Say the Animal Responded? The Serpentine Gallery’s General Ecology research project and Animalesque at BALTIC all highlight a growing interest in deepening the connection with our animal kin. In academia, Animal Research Nexus is a unique example of a large-scale project that brings together researchers from humanities and social sciences disciplines to address policy and practice around the use of animals in research. In the field of applied ethology, the expansion from a unique focus on how to limit the negative experiences of animals to also including positive animal welfare represents an important shift in the scientific attention to animals.

Alive Together is an interdisciplinary community for research interests in human/animal relationships, developed through the Hybrid Lab Network.

Alive Together shares approaches to developing knowledge, teaching and learning methods from the arts, sciences and humanities with an emphasis on building skills in interdisciplinary working methods.

ALIVE TOGETHER launches in 2020/21 with an interdisciplinary online course run between Newcastle, UK and Porto, Portugal, “Alive Together I: Human/Animal Relationships in Crisis?” that asks, what does it mean for humans to be alive together with animals when our ecological future is precarious? How does the pandemic reshape our lives with other species? What are the core skills humans must develop to sustain good working relationships across disciplinary and species boundaries? How can interdisciplinary approaches inform the ways in which humans and animals co-exist together? 

Alive Together I will introduce and develop a community for interdisciplinary research in human/animal relationships with the aim of fostering and supporting projects which develop interdisciplinary approaches to human/animal and multispecies relationship research. 

Alive Together I is open to artists and researchers/academics with interests in human/animal relationships across disciplinary boundaries.